Nigeria officials reject $400,000 bribe from Tramadol importer

Officials of Nigeria Customs Serive have rejected a bribe sum of over $400,000, the national police spokesperson wrote on Twitter on Friday.

According to Abayomi Shogunle, the officials at the Apapa Command of customs in Lagos rejected the dollar bribe from an importer who wanted to clear a container of Tramadol.

Apapa is an area in Nigeria’s commercial capital, Lagos. It is located to the west of Lagos Island. Apapa contains a number of ports and terminals operated by the Nigerian Ports Authority, including the major port of Lagos State and Lagos Port Complex.

Tramadol is a pharmaceutical product prohibited under Nigerian laws. The abuse of Tramadol is known to have dire health consequences among the population.

Already, Nigeria has banned the manufacture and importation of codeine. The Ministry of Health in May 2018 directed the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) to immediately cease the importation of codeine.

The ban was specifically in respect of codeine as an active pharmaceutical ingredient for cough preparations. The directive came on the heels of an addiction crisis exposed by the BBC in an undercover film.

Codeine is a derivative of opium; used as an antitussive (to relieve coughing) and an analgesic (to relieve pain)

Nigeria’s ports are known to be one of the main routes through which contraband and other illegal materials get to enter Africa’s most populous nation.

I commend officers of the Apapa Command of Nigeria Customs Service for their rejection of $412,000 (₦150m) bribe.
$ offered by an importer who wanted officers to clear container of Tramadol, a prohibited pharmaceutical product.
Nigerians are proud of all of you. God bless you. pic.twitter.com/FbOReb0qfL